Nora Harrington was born in
London, England in 1974. She graduated from an arts high school,
Suitland Center for the Arts, and received a BFA with honors from the
Cooper Union School of Art in New York City. While in New York,
Harrington taught painting to high school students and worked at the
Whitney Museum of American Art. In 1998, led by her passion for
painting outdoors, Harrington moved to rural Rappahannock County, Virginia. She resides in a restored cabin on the Farm at Sunnyside as an Artist in Residence, along with her husband and son. Her
paintings are in private and corporate collections throughout the
United States and in Germany, England, Spain, and Italy.

Nora says about this group
of paintings: “I share with The Farm at Sunnyside a deep
reverence for the natural world and a desire to ﬁnd and create
balance in our environment. As an artist I intuitively seek balance
for aesthetic reasons- between man made and natural forms; between
individual elements and their larger context; between what is
evanescent and what is enduring. The Farm at Sunnyside is
working with issues of balance in the landscapes they create as well;
it is the fulcrum of their work within the worlds of agriculture and
conservation...

The title of this body of
paintings 'Presence of Place: Paintings from the Farm at Sunnyside' also plays on the phrase “presence of mind”
because the landscapes on the farm both come from, and foster, an
ampliﬁed awareness of these places. Paintings are monuments to what
we admire and value as a society. I proffer that the places I have
painted in this series should be honored for the character and sense
of balance they exemplify.”

This
exhibition is our second in our series of three Virginia Artist's
this Fall. For
more information visit the www.rhballard.com
or call 540 675-1411.

Here are few of Nora's beautiful new paintings from her upcoming show. You can also visit her website: www.noraharrington.com

1 comment:

That doesn't seem to be what you are asking. If you are asking about a door that would swing open like a regular door, then slide into the wall perpendicular to the doors closed position on the left and right sides of the washer/dryer, then yes there is hardware for that type of installation.